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I was prepared to
dislike Max Kelada even before I knew him. The war had just
finished and the passenger traffic in the ocean-going liners was
heavy. Accommodation was very hard to get and you had to put up
with whatever the agents chose to offer you. You could not hope for
a cabin to yourself and I was thankful to be given one in which
there were only two berths. But when I was told the name of my
companion my heart sank. It suggested closed portholes and the
night air rigidly excluded. It was bad enough to share a cabin for
fourteen days with anyone (I was going from San Francisco to
Yokohama, but I should have looked upon it with less dismay if my
fellow passenger`s name had been Smith or Brown.
When I went on board I found Mr Kelada`s luggage already below. I
did not like the look of it; there were too many labels on the
suit-cases, and the wardrobe trunk was too big. He had unpacked his
toilet things, and I observed that he was a patron of the excellent
Monsieur Coty; for I saw on the washing-stand his scent, his
hair-wash and his brilliantine. Mr Kelada`s brushes, ebony with his
monogram in gold, would have been all the better for a scrub. I did
not at all like Mr Kelada. I made my way into the smoking-room. I
called for a pack of cards and began to play patience. I had
scarcely started before a man came up to me and asked me if he was
right in thinking my name was so and so.
"I am Mr Kelada," he added, with a smile that showed a row of
flashing teeth, and sat down.
"Oh, yes, we`re sharing a cabin, I think."
"Bit of luck, I call it. You never know who you`re going to be put
in with. I was jolly glad when I heard you were English. I`m all
for us English slicking together when we`re abroad, if you
understand what I mean."
I blinked.
"Are you English?" I asked, perhaps tactlessly.
"Rather. You don`t think I look like an American, do you? British
to the backbone, that`s what I am."
To prove it, Mr Kelada took out of his pocket a passport and airily
waved it under my nose.
King George has many strange subjects. Mr Kelada was short and of a
sturdy build, clean-shaven and dark-skinned, with a fleshy hooked
nose and very large, lustrous and liquid eyes. His long black hair
was sleek and curly. He spoke with a fluency in which there was
nothing English and his gestures were exuberant. I fell pretty sure
that a closer inspection of that British passport would have
betrayed the fact that Mr Kelada was born under a bluer sky than is
generally seen in England.
"What will you have?" he asked me.
I looked at him doubtfully. Prohibition was in force and to all
appearance the ship was bone-dry. When I am not thirsty I do not
know which I dislike more, ginger ale or lemon squash. But Mr
Kelada flashed an oriental smile at me.
"Whisky and soda or a dry martini, you have only to say the word."
From each of his hip pockets he fished a flask and laid it on the
table before me. I chose the martini, and calling the steward he
ordered a tumbler of ice and a couple of glasses.
"A very good cocktail," I said.
"Well, there are plenty more where that came from, and if you`ve
got any friends on board, you tell them you`ve got a pal who`s got
all the liquor in the world."
Mr Kelada was chatty. He talked of New York and of San Francisco.
He discussed plays, pictures, and politics. He was patriotic. The
Union Jack is an impressive piece of drapery, but when it is
nourished by a gentleman from Alexandria or Beirut, I cannot but
feel that it loses somewhat in dignity. Mr Kelada was familiar." I
do not wish to put on airs, but I cannot help feeling that it is
seemly in a total stranger to put "mister" before my name when he
addresses me. Mr Kelada, doubtless to set me at my case, used no
such formality. I did not like Mr Kelada. I had put aside the cards
when he sat down, but now, thinking that for this first occasion
our conversation had lasted long enough, I went on with my game.
"The three on the four," said Mr Kelada.
There is nothing more exasperating when you are playing patience
than to be told where to put the card you have turned up before you
have had a chance to look for yourself.
"It`s coming out, it`s coming out," he cried. "The ten on the
knave."
With rage and hatred in my heart I finished.
Then he seized the pack.
"Do you like card tricks?"
"No, I hate card tricks," I answered.
"Well, I`ll just show you this one."
He showed me three. Then I said I would go down to the dining-room
and get my seat at table.
"Oh, that`s all right," he said. "I`ve already taken a seat for
you. I thought that as we were in the same state-room we might just
as well sit at the same table."
I did not like Mr Kelada.
I not only shared a cabin with him and ate three meals a day at the
same table, but I could not walk round the deck without his joining
me. It was impossible to snub him. It never occurred to him that he
was not wanted. He was certain that you were as glad to see him as
he was to see you. In your own house you might have kicked him
downstairs and slammed the door in his face without the suspicion
dawning on him that he was not a welcome visitor. He was a good
mixer, and in three days knew everyone on board. He ran everything.
He managed the sweeps, conducted the auctions, collected money for
prizes at the sports, got up quoit and golf matches, organized the
concert and arranged the fancy-dress ball. He was everywhere and
always. He was certainly the best haled man in the ship. We called
him Mr Know-All, even to his face. He took it as a compliment. But
it was at mealtimes that he was most intolerable. For the better
part of an hour then he had us at his mercy. He was hearty, jovial,
loquacious and argumentative. He knew everything better than
anybody else, and it was an affront to his overweening vanity that
you should disagree with him. He would not drop a subject, however
unimportant, till he had brought you round to his way of thinking.
The possibility that he could be mistaken never occurred to him. He
was the chap who knew. We sat at the doctor`s table. Mr Kelada
would certainly have had it all his own way, for the doctor was
lazy and I was frigidly indifferent, except for a man called Ramsay
who sat there also. He was as dogmatic as Mr Kelada and resented
bitterly the Levantine`s cocksureness. The discussions they had
were acrimonious and interminable.
Ramsay was in the American Consular Service and was stationed at
Kobe. He was a great heavy fellow from the Middle West, with loose
fat under a tight skin, and he bulged out of this really-made
clothes. He was on his way back to resume his post, having been on
a flying visit to New York to retell his wife who had been spending
a year at home. Mrs Ramsay was a very pretty little thing, with
pleasant manners and a sense of humour. The Consular Service is
ill-paid, and she was dressed always very simply; but she knew how
to wear her clothes. She achieved an effect of quiet distinction. I
should not have paid any particular attention to her but that she
possessed a quality that may be common enough in women, but
nowadays is not obvious in their demeanour. You could not look at
her without being struck by her modesty. It shone in her like a
flower on a coat.
One evening at dinner the conversation by chance drifted to the
subject of pearls. There had been in the papers a good deal of talk
about the culture pearls which the cunning Japanese were making,
and the doctor remarked that they must inevitably diminish the
value of real ones. They were very good already; they would soon be
perfect. Mr Kelada, as was his habit, rushed the new topic. He told
us all that was to be known about pearls. I do not believe Ramsay
knew anything about them at all, but he could not resist the
opportunity to have a fling at the Levantine, and in five minutes
we were in the middle of a heated argument. I had seen Mr Kelada
vehement and voluble before, but never so voluble and vehement as
now. At last something that Ramsay said stung him, for he thumped
the table and shouted:
"Well, I ought to know what I am talking about. I`m going to Japan
just to look into this Japanese pearl business. I`m in the trade
and there`s not a man in it who won`t tell you that what I say
about pearls goes. I know all the best pearls in the world, and
what I don`t know about pearls isn`t worth knowing."
Here was news for us, for Mr Kelada, with all his loquacity, had
never told anyone what his business was. We only knew vaguely that
he was going to Japan on some commercial errand. He looked round
the table triumphantly.
"They`ll never be able to get a culture pearl that an expert like
me can`t tell with half an eye." He pointed to a chain that Mrs
Ramsay wore. "You take my word for it, Mrs Ramsay, that chain
you`re wearing will never be worth a cent less than it is now."
Mrs Ramsay in her modest way flushed a little and slipped the chain
inside her dress. Ramsay leaned forward. He gave us all a look and
a smile flickered in his eyes.
"That`s a pretty chain of Mrs Ramsay`s, isn`t it?"
"I noticed it at once," answered Mr Kelada. "Gee, I said to myself,
those are pearls all right."
"I didn`t buy it myself, of course. I`d be interested to know how
much you think it cost."
"Oh, in the trade somewhere round fifteen thousand dollars. But if
it was bought on Fifth Avenue shouldn`t be surprised to hear that
anything up to thirty thousand was paid for it."
Ramsay smiled grimly.
"You`ll be surprised to hear that Mrs Ramsay bought that siring at
a department store the day before we left New York, for eighteen
dollars."
Mr Kelada flushed.
"Rot. It`s not only real, but it`s as fine a siring for its size as
I`ve ever seen."
"Will you bet on it? I`ll bet you a hundred dollars it`s
imitation."
"Done."
"Oh, Elmer, you can`t bet on a certainty," said Mrs Ramsay.
She had a little smile on her lips and her tone was gently
deprecating.
"Can`t I? If I get a chance of easy money like that I should be all
sorts of a fool not to take it."
"But how can it be proved?" she continued. "It`s only my word
against Mr Kelada`s."
"Let me look at the chain, and if it`s imitation I`ll tell you
quickly enough. I can afford to lose a hundred dollars," said Mr
Kelada.
"Take it off, dear. Let the gentleman look at it as much as he
wants."
Mrs Ramsay hesitated a moment. She put her hands to the clasp.
"I can`t undo it," she said. "Mr Kelada will just have to take my
word for it."
I had a sudden suspicion that something unfortunate was about to
occur, but I could think of nothing to say.
Ramsay jumped up.
"I`ll undo it."
He handed the chain to Mr Kelada. The Levantine look a magnifying
glass from his pocket and closely examined it. A smile of triumph
spread over his smooth and swarthy face. He handed back the chain.
He was about to speak. Suddenly he caught sight of Mrs Ramsay`s
face. It was so white that she looked as though she were about to
faint. She was staring at him with wide and terrified eyes. They
held a desperate appeal; it was so clear that I wondered why her
husband did not see it.
Mr Kelada stopped with his mouth open. He flushed deeply. You could
almost see the effort he was making over himself.
"I was mistaken," he said. "It`s a very good imitation, but of
course as soon as I looked through my glass I saw that it wasn`t
real. I think eighteen dollars is just about as much as the damned
thing`s worth."
He took out his pocket book and from it a hundred-dollar bill. He
handed it to Ramsay without a word.
"Perhaps that`ll teach you not to be so cocksure another time, my
young friend," said Ramsay as he took the note.
I noticed that Mr Kelada`s hands were trembling.
The story spread over the ship as stories do, and he had to put up
with a good deal of chaff that evening. It was a fine joke that Mr
Know-All had been caught out. But Mrs Ramsay retired to her
state-room with a headache.
Next morning I got up and began to shave. Mr Kelada lay on his bed
smoking a cigarette. Suddenly there was a small scraping sound and
I saw a letter pushed under the door. I opened the door and looked
out. There was nobody there. I picked up the letter and saw that it
was addressed to Max Kelada. The name was written in block letters.
I handed it to him.
"Who`s this from?" He opened it. "Oh!"
He took out of the envelope, not a letter, but a hundred-dollar
bill. He looked at me and again he reddened. He tore the envelope
into little bits and gave them to me.
"Do you mind just throwing them out of the porthole?" I did as he
asked, and then I looked at him with a smile.
"No one likes being made to look a perfect damned fool," he said.
"Were the pearls real?"
"If I had a pretty little wife I shouldn`t let her spend a year in
New York while I stayed at Kobe," said he.
At that moment I did not entirely dislike Mr Kelada. He reached out
for his pocket book and carefully put in it the hundred-dollar
note.